Audiences: start longlisting and booking early to support artists and #UnleashYourFringe
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Today, Thursday 04 April 2024, a new batch of shows to be staged at the 2024 Edinburgh Festival Fringe has been revealed. All shows will be available to view on edfringe.com from 12:00 today.
The 1,373 shows span many genres of the Fringe programme, including cabaret and variety; childrenâs shows; comedy; dance, physical theatre and circus; music; musicals and opera; spoken word; and theatre. They join the 274 shows revealed previously, resulting in a total of 1,647 shows so far.
More shows are set to be announced on Thursday 09 May, while the official programme launch will take place on Wednesday 12 June.
Audience members are encouraged to start compiling their favourite shows and booking early to support artists, using the hashtag #UnleashYourFringe in the run-up to this yearâs festival.Â
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Shona McCarthy, Chief Executive of the Edinburgh Festival Fringe Society, said: âItâs super exciting when a new batch of shows gets announced â you can really feel the momentum gathering as August gets closer and closer! I canât wait to get stuck in and add some more shows to my favourites list â and to book a few in, just in case they sell out.â
âArtists are the backbone of this festival and theyâre at the heart of everything we do at the Fringe Society.
“Booking tickets in advance, adding free and unticketed shows to your favourites list, giving shout-outs to artists and companies on social media using #UnleashYourFringe â these are things that Fringe audiences can do to show some essential early support and boost morale for the artists they love.
“So if your fave is coming to Edinburgh, or if a show tackles an issue thatâs close to your heart, get it locked in now!â
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Below is a small representative sample of shows available to book from today. The full list of shows so far can be found at edfringe.com from 12:00:
Cabaret
Yes-Ya-Yebo! at Laughing Horse is âan all-singing, all-dancing extravaganza celebrating South Africa’s 12 official languages, sprinkled with that incredible township vibeâ. Meanwhile, audiences are invited to âindulge in the hottest pop-up cabaret experience on Cowgate with a rotating selection of the most electrifying and scandalous performers at the festivalâ in Big Gay Afterparty at Just the Tonic.
La Clique brings its âbreathtaking, hilarious, sexy, dangerous and iconicâ mix of circus, cabaret and comedy back to Underbelly with two shows, the traditional main event and a family-friendly Sideshow. At Eve, âthe award-winning comedy trio Bad Clownsâ present âa night of the best comedy acts from this year’s festivalâ in Bad Clowns and Good Friends. And The Burlesque Show at Hill Street Theatre is âa competition with a brilliant prize that will satisfy the experienced as well as the novice burlesque watcherâ.
‘Award-winning magicianâ Dan Bastianelli returns with an all-new evening of close-up magicâ in Deception at Paradise Green. German magician Thomas W Kuenstner âcombines applied psychology, storytelling and old-school conjuring to generate original mysteriesâ in Truth. Lies. And Other Illusions at the Arthur Conan Doyle Centre. Caspar Thomas demonstrates The Art of Close-Up Magic at Gilded Balloon while Andrew Frost lays his Cards on the Table at Pleasance. And âmind-reading and unbelievable trickery abound in this exploration of how autism and magic make anything possibleâ: itâs Naughty or Neurodiverse â Magic from Another Planet at theSpaceUK.
In Melody at The Voodoo Rooms, Aidan Sadler guides audiences âthrough the top steps to surviving the apocalypse with 80s-inspired synth-wave melodiesâ. Australian piano cabaret entertainer Antony (Dr H) Hubmayer brings two shows to artSpace@StMarks â A Monty Python Cabaret Singalong Circus and Another Unwasted Evening â The Genius of Tom Lehrer â plus a third, Meat Loaf â Just the Best Bits, to PBH’s Free Fringe. At Greenside, Baby Belle: Young, Dumb and Full of Autism is âa whimsical, musical exploration of social versus personal identity from the perspective of a late-identified and diagnosed non-binary autistic personâ. And in Sawdust Symphony at ZOO, âobsessed characters discover and transform their space and themselves, transporting the spectator into a unique DIY experienceâ.
âRome Mosaic explores sisterhood and the sibling dynamic â with dance, lipsyncing and good old-fashioned sibling rivalryâ in Sisters? at Hootenannies. Award-winning cabaret star Ada Campe shows off her Big Duck Energy at The Stand Comedy Club, while âglamorous, hilarious and fiercely clever Jens Radda⊠reinvents Sinatraâs classics through saucy modern twistsâ in Skank Sinatra at Assembly. In The Taylor Swift Eras Drag Party at The Three Sisters, hosts âBlaze, Rujazzle and Rozie Cheeks⊠take you on a journey through the eras of Taylor Swiftâ.
Childrenâs shows
âThe disability Taskmasterâ Blue Badge Bunch returns to Pleasance âas two teams battle it out to come up trumps in a show where disadvantage is an advantageâ. At Royal College of Physicians, games-master Jes presents âcrazy bingo variations like you’ve never seen beforeâ in Amazing Prize Family Comedy Bingo. And âyour little ones will move, groove and dream, plus youâll walk away with your very own custom-made medal,â in The Comedy Games with Coach Mon (theSpaceUK).
âFull of inviting, imagination-tickling charmâ, Taiwan Season: Little Drops of Rain (Assembly) âis a feat of non-verbal, environmentally-conscious storytelling ingeniously led by Foley soundâ. How to Catch a Book Witch at Underbelly is âan open-hearted show aimed at children ages 4+ exploring the importance of libraries and sharing storiesâ. And âwhen the directors call for auditions for new actors, comedy and mayhem ensueâ in Reach for the Stars at Hill Street Theatre. Meanwhile, Dragon Song Productions presents a trilogy of shows for children aged six and under at the LifeCare Centre â Ice Dragon, Moon Dragon and Sea Dragon â plus Dragon Shows for Babies, each âa magical and stimulating show to start a love of the theatreâ.
âFeaturing stories by Scottish icon Alan Cummingâ, Dragonory: Magic and Music at Edinburgh Fringe! (Hootenannies) âoffers an unforgettable mix of storytelling and music, promoting love and acceptanceâ, while Newbury Youth Theatre presents The Fantastical World of My Uncle Arly at Paradise Green, âa voyage through the absurd world of Edward Lear.
âReimagined from a beloved Korean tale by Jung-saeng Kwonâ, Aha! Doggy Poo (Bedlam Theatre) âincorporates dance, magic and Korean music to embody the philosophy that nothing in the world is uselessâ. Meanwhile, âEdinburghâs gruesome past is brought to life by two performers (as seen on CBBCâs Saturday Mash Up)â in Plague, Poo ‘n’ Punishment at Greenside.
FlamenKids at the Edinburgh New Town Church gives kids âa fun and visual way to learn about Spanish culture and flamenco art: rhythms, dance movements, clapping, guitar, singing, castanets, percussion and language expressionsâ. And a âprofessional violinist and cellist perform familiar classical melodies and tell a musical version of Pinocchioâ in Heads, Shoulders, Strings and Bows at Stockbridge Church.
The Spanish Gentleman Juggler is at Laughing Horse, âbringing to life everyday objects such as fishing poles, drinking glasses and kebab sticks alongside invented props and gymnastic ballsâ. Sing, Sign and Sensory at Gilded Balloon offers âan immersive, creative experience in customised, inflatable sensory podsâ for ages 0â2.
Comedy
As ever, thereâs a strong international flavour at the Fringe. Taiwanese American comedian Titi Lee is a Good Girl Gone Baddie at Just the Tonic, discussing âcoming out to their immigrant parents as bisexual, and then non-binary, getting pandemic boobs, and renouncing their good girl waysâ. Prev Reddy, âthe first South African comic that is Indian, queer and outspokenâ is at the Arthur Conan Doyle Centre in Prev Reddy is a Triple Threat. In Antidepressed at Greenside, âEge Ăztokat talks, sings and screams about the wonderfully terrible predicament of her existence as a young woman in Turkeyâ. Mumbai-based âglobal stand-up starâ Rahul Subramanian makes his Edinburgh debut with Who Are You? at Assembly. Bodega Bonnies at The Stand Comedy Club features âa new rotation of the festâs best comics from around the globe (but mostly from New York)â. And âin his debut hour, Jin Hao walks you through the seascape of his mind, filled with nightmares of being a spider, dreams of joining the yakuza and breezy memories of serving in the military with the boysâ in Swimming in a Submarine at Pleasance.
Suchandrika Chakrabarti âtries to explain our chronically online era to her niece (5), and speculates about the futureâ in Doomscrolling at Hootenannies. And audiences are invited to join Jack Freeman âas he learns how to love and be loved in this hilarious solo show combining stand-up with lots of heart and even more limpâ: Embrace Me: A Solo Show About Dating and Disability That is Also Funny (Laughing Horse). âHe’s been a TV presenter, DJ, double-glazing salesman, footballer and comedianâ â now James Gardner: Journeyman (WIP) is at Boteco do Brasil. Musical comedian Amelia Bayler ânavigates a year of heartbreak and learning to be aloneâ in Easy Second Album at the Scottish Comedy Festival. And Robin Cairns, âwith his array of comedy characters, gives us a riotous hour exploring the (hopefully friendly) rivalry between Scotland’s major citiesâ in Edinburgh’s Pandas Were Just Weegies in Disguise! (St Columba’s by the Castle Scottish Episcopal Church).
âImagine an Englishman, an Irishman and a Scotsman finally in the same bar as a therapistâ â itâs Five Mugs, No Tea at Leith Depot. The Leith Comedy Festival Presents… The Edinburgh Fringe Edition at The Biscuit Factory, boasting a different line-up every night and âyour golden ticket to a great night outâ. And A Political Breakfast at PBH’s Free Fringe is a âpolitical comedy panel show chaired by Chris O’Neill or Harun Musho’d involving up to four comedians (subject to alarm clocks working) and the audienceâ.
Lady ADHD is at theSpaceUK and online, âtracing how Blaire Postmanâs unique comedy bits (fueled by a rollercoaster of flipchart rabbit-holes) at first revealed to her the unexpected connections of lifeâs intricacies, then panned out further to expose the true nature of her own brainâ. Character Building Experience at Bedlam Theatre âis a Dungeons-and-Dragons-style comedic interactive roleplaying game show, suitable for the experts, the novices and the uninitiated-but-curiousâ. At Hill Street Theatre, BBC Radio 4âs âcop-turned-comedian Alfie Moore returns with a brand-new showâ: Fair Cop â Live!
âShameless, charmingly aggressive and unladylike, she’s the funniest half-Sri Lankan gal from Coventryâ â sheâs Stella Graham, and her show Phoenix is on at PBH’s Free Fringe. In Good Girl at Paradise Green, Rhiannon Jenkins goes on âan immersive, interactive clown adventure as she plays with male fantasies, female sexuality, and how we navigate 21st century womanhoodâ. And Daliso Chaponda ârevisits the themes of [his] ancient debut showâ two decades later in Feed This Black Man Again at Underbelly.
Among the familiar Fringe faces returning to this yearâs festival are David O’Doherty, Flo & Joan, Reginald D Hunter, Milton Jones, Adam Hills, Dara Ă Briain (Assembly); Adam Kay (Edinburgh Playhouse); Bobby Davro (Frankenstein Pub); Andrew Maxwell, Craig Hill, Lucy Porter and Patrick Monahan (Just the Tonic); Raul Kohli (Just the Tonic and Laughing Horse); Sian Davis (Laughing Horse); Sara Pascoe, Nish Kumar and Glenn Moore (Monkey Barrel Comedy); Ahir Shah, Kieran Hodgson, Nina Conti, Rose Matafeo, Sophie Duker, Jordan Brookes, Paul Merton and Suki Webster (Pleasance); and Mark Thomas (The Stand), while former politician Mhairi Black makes her Fringe comedy debut at Gilded Balloon.
Ivo Graham is at the Fringe in three capacities in 2024: with his stand-up show Grand Designs at Pleasance, his theatre show Carousel at Assembly and as the host of Comedians’ DJ Battles at La Belle Angele.
Dance, physical theatre and circus
âMarrying traditional rhythms with modern danceâ, HuXi / Breath (Paradise Green) âallows audiences to embody the intricate connection of Qi within and beyond, fostering links between self-realisation and higher realmsâ. In Korean Painter at theSpaceUK, the Contemporary Yunhee company paints âvarious pictures on stage using the traditional Korean hat called sangmoâ, offering audiences a âmysterious experienceâ.
âAward-winning choreographer Aparna Ramaswamy weaves together threads of body, memory, desire and devotion to describe the eternal relationship between the deity and the devoteeâ in Ananta, the Eternal at Assembly. In The Flock and Moving Cloud at ZOO (part of the Made in Scotland showcase), Scottish Dance Theatre present works by âtwo of the most-exciting female choreographers in the European dance scene: Roser LĂłpez Espinosa and Sofia Nappiâ.
At Edinburgh New Town Church, Flamenco in Scotland is âdirected and choreographed by Inma Montero and performed by top flamenco professional artistsâ. Flamenco Fiesta at Alba Flamenca âoffers the audience an intimate and delicate atmosphere to enjoy the wonders of the passionate art of Flamencoâ. And 2Flamenco brings a âpowerful, exquisite, beautiful and unforgettable Flamenco experienceâ to Argyle Cellar Bar, while âJolly performers from Japan will take you on a journey through a dazzling world of rhythm, tap dance and comedyâ in Sushi Tap Show 2024 at Greenside.
Part of the Sacred Arts Festival at Old Saint Paulâs Church, Dancing Ash Wednesday is âa piece in which movement interacts with the speakerâ in TS Eliotâs titular poem. âTowers grow and decay, bodies leap and are caught, physical limits are pushed to their extremeâ in Circa: Humans 2.0 at Underbelly. the Curve at Just the Tonic âstitches together acrobatics, dance, physical comedy and spoken word to form the image of life as a circus performer â and what happens to the body and mind in the processâ. And audiences can âcome and witness Martin and Logyâs ongoing battle against the gravitational pull of the planetâ in Circus Sonas Presents: Down with Gravity at Laughing Horse.
Music
âHailed by critics and fans alike as one of the finest songwriters of his generation,â Dean Friedman brings his Words and Music to The Stables at Prestonfield. âAfter nearly a decade-long absence, Sandi Thom makes her long-awaited reintroduction to the iconic Edinburgh Festival Fringe this yearâ at The Voodoo Rooms with her new song collection, Warpaint. Valery Ponomarev: The Jazz Messenger! at The Jazz Bar features âan unmissable exclusive performance from legendary Russian-American trumpeter and Jazz Messengers alumnus, Valery Ponomarev, who dramatically escaped 70s USSR and toured the world with Art Blakey and The Jazz Messengersâ.
The songs of Jo Carley and The Old Dry Skulls âtell stories of deals with the devil, demons in love, witch doctors, zombies, ghosts, ghouls, journeys to the deepest jungles and other exotic adventuresâ â hear them at the Argyle Cellar Bar. At Greenside, âiuchair tells a tale of debauchery played out in the coarsest catches of Henry Purcell and his contemporariesâ in To Your Rude Health! At Paradise Green, The Seas Are Rising: Stories of a Climate in Crisis is âa multimedia concert experience calling attention to the urgency of the climate crisis through original songs by American musician and songwriter Dan Sheehanâ. And Grammy-winning cellist Leah Coloff âhas played alongside the greatest names in contemporary music â from David Bowie to Debbie Harryâ; her show, Super Second Rate, is at theSpaceUK.
Audiences are invited to âjoin Delhi maestro Manmohan Dogra for a journey through soulful Hindustani classical music, featuring vocal ragas and a tabla solo in Banares style,â in Raag Rang: A Journey Through Indian Musical Traditions at Arthur Conan Doyle Centre. Seckou Keita and his Homeland Band are at The Queen’s Hall â formed in 2020, âtheyâve been lifting audiences to their feet and leaving them buzzing ever sinceâ. And at Valvona & Crolla, Pitchblenders: SĂł Danço Samba is âan evening of vibrant bossa nova, ebullient bal musette and soul-stirring contemporary songs from Spain, France and Brazilâ.
At Assembly, âOut of the Blue is an internationally acclaimed a cappella group from the University of Oxford and, after jet-setting across the world earlier this year, the group is excited to return to their home turf to showcase new talent and new songsâ. Meanwhile, âan all-male a cappella group of nerds from Imperial College Londonâ deliver The Techtonics: 44 Days of Liz Truss (A Cappella) at Gilded Balloon.
The Sacred Arts Festival has programmed church performances across the city this August, with Ave Maria: Centuries of Prayer and Praise at Old Saint Paulâs Church, Sacred Jazz at St Maryâs Catholic Cathedral and The Lord is my Shepherd: Sacred song of the English musical renaissance at St Vincent’s Chapel. âThe Howe Street Singers, directed by Les Shankland, perform Faure’s much-loved Requiem and equally beautiful Cantique de Jean Racine alongside Leonard Bernstein’s Chichester Psalmsâ as part of the Sacred Arts Festival Music at the Church of the Sacred Heart.
Edinburgh-based chamber choir Calton Consort âpresents an hour of choral music from LGBTQ+ composers and alliesâ in Choral Pride at Canongate Kirk. St Giles’ Cathedral hosts a programme of Celebrity Recitals on its âworld-famous Rieger organâ, with performances from Francesca Massey, Tom Bell and Michael Harris. St Mary’s Lunchtime Recitals return to St Mary’s Episcopal Cathedral, featuring âa wide variety of performers playing and singing in one of Edinburgh’s most beautiful concert spacesâ. And at Edinburgh New Town Church, Scottish Voices and Friends features âan imaginative and diverse program, including world premieres of new classical music, with a special focus on settings of Gaelic poetry by Catriona Montgomery and from the Orthodox poetry of Konstantin Balmont and traditional Ukrainian carolsâ.
â16-year-old Brit School pianist, guitarist and singerâ George Cassidy brings his second show, Piano Boy, to Laughing Horse, mixing âhis own songs with those of Elton, the Beatles and many moreâ. Lisa Scott and the All-Stars bring their Fabulous Sounds of the 60s to Leith Dockers Club, âcovering all genres of music and top-class musicians, including The Beatles, The Rolling Stones, Tina Turner and moreâ. Vocalist Georg Tormann performs âa touching and entertaining tribute to Old Blue Eyesâ in Sinatra â The Greatest Hits at Frankenstein Pub. Absolutely (not) Free â An Evening of Zappa is âa smorgasbord of Frank Zappa classics hand-delivered by those finest purveyors of conceptual continuity, Pygmy Twylyteâ â catch them at Bannermans. Brian Kennedy toured the US with Bob Dylan, Van Morrison and Joni Mitchell in 1998 â now he celebrates the latterâs 80th year in Brian Kennedy â A Love Letter To Joni Volume 2 at Greyfriars Hall at Virgin Hotels Edinburgh. And at Le Monde, All the Hits of Frankie Valli and The Four Seasons offers exactly what it says on the tin, with âfavourites including Sherry, Let’s Hang On, Big Girls Don’t Cry, Walk Like a Man, Grease and many moreâ.
âGuitar, piano, violin, harmonium, banjo, vocals, and sometimes double bass create a folky sound with elements of classical, ambient metal, spoken word, Celtic reels and Eastern European scalesâ in The Seventh Season at The Royal Oak. Fiddler Alastair Savage has two shows at St Cuthbert’s Church: Scotland and Beyond with cellist Alice Allen and The Scottish Fiddle Story âalongside Gregor Blamey on piano / accordion, with a specially written script read by legendary actor John Sheddenâ; heâs also at Canongate Kirk with Scots Fiddle Old and New. Audiences can catch âWendy Weatherby (cello, vocals), John Sampson (trumpet, crumhorn, recorders), Sandy Brechin (accordion, piano), Andy Cannon (storyteller) and Allan and Rosemary McMillan (vocals, guitar) for a cheerful, poignant or nostalgic jaunt through our favourite songs, tunes and storiesâ in Mrs Weatherby’s Concert Party at artSpace@StMarks.
âExploring classical works for viola and piano⊠the Kosonen Ranieri Duo will evoke the feeling of having just woken from a sweet slumberâ in Viola and Piano: AprĂ©s un RĂȘve at Stockbridge Church. At St Cecilia’s Hall, The Triumph of Time and Truth: Handel and Vivaldi is âa vocal programme⊠threaded with gorgeous instrumental harpsichord and violin instrumental piecesâ. Audiences can âjoin Duo Malvina for an afternoon of beautiful Classical Guitar music for twoâ at St Columba’s by the Castle Scottish Episcopal Church. And ârising American opera star and composer Johan Hartman is joined by Edinburghâs Ailsa Aitkenheadâ in 2 Artists, 2 Concerts, 2 Premieres at Greyfriars Kirk.
In Massaoke at Underbelly, audiences ae invited to join Rockstar Weekend âfor their biggest and most spectacular show ever â a high-voltage, spandex-clad, crowd-powered, sing-along megamix of the biggest hairbrush anthems from across the decades, live and unleashed with giant video lyricsâ.
Musicals and opera
The Wellbrick Centre on Roswell Drive (Paradise Green) is âa conversational musical with poignant, comedic and absurd elementsâ, focusing on two patients at a fictional NHS facility. SOFTPLANET Productions bring a pair of grisly historical musicals to the Mackenzie Building: Deacon Brodie is âpacked with deceit, love, laughs, theft and some great contemporary songsâ, while Flesh uncovers âthe real-life drama of Burke and Hare, Scotland’s first serial killers, with a comic twist and original folk-rock songsâ. On a similar theme, Ripper at Hill Street Theatre is âa terrifying musical look through the eyes of Jack the Ripper, the officer who pursued him, and one of his victimsâ.
Macbeth at Saint Stephen’s Theatre offers a new take on Shakespeare, mixing original and modern text with âsongs from the likes of Foo Fighters, The Prodigy, Siouxsie and the Banshees and Dire Straits to name a fewâ. In âbrand-new comedy musicalâ The Weird Sisters (Just the Tonic), Amaranth, Scarlett and Blush âattempt to initiate the audience into their covenâ to a soundtrack of âpunchy power-popâ. At Assembly, You & It: The Musical explores romance and technology with the story of Gyujin, who âorders an AI robot that eventually replicates his dead wifeâ.
Beowulf the Musical at Greyfriars Kirk âpresents two medieval myths intertwined: on one side the famous hero as strong as 30 men, and on the other a princess who must live her life in service to her kingdom against her own heartâ.
At Greenside, BANNED the musical âfollows a group of gender misfits through the events leading up to their debut at a local performing arts festivalâ. Kafka’s Metamorphosis: The Musical! With Puppets! is at Pleasance, âa silly, surreal take on Kafka’s paranoid, mystifying masterpiece to commemorate the 100th anniversary of his deathâ.
Captivate Theatre brings its own mini-festival programme to The Edinburgh Academy, with performances of The Phantom of the Opera, Charlie and the Chocolate Factory, Roald Dahlâs Matilda The Musical Junior, Disney’s Frozen Junior and Les MisĂ©rables School Edition. At Underbelly, DIVA: Live From Hell! is a âblood-stained love letter to Broadway â a solo musical about rivalry, vengeance, and killer ambitionâ.
Arias in the Afternoon at the Edinburgh New Town Church features âinternational opera singer Brian Bannatye-Scott (bass) with rising stars Caroline Taylor (soprano), Catherine Backhouse (mezzo-soprano), Laurie Slavin (tenor) and James Atkinson (baritone), accompanied by dazzling Polish pianist, Michal Gajzlerâ. And at theSpaceUK, Fringe â The Musical isnât what you think â itâs ‘a hilarious musical comedy about a cherished family run hairdressing salon in Essexâ.
Spoken word
At Hill Street Theatre, writer Gigi Bella explores âmental health, feminism and the gospel of Taco Bell through poetry, comedy and musicâ with show Big Feelings. Poets Christine De Luca and Elspeth Murray, in combination with Katharine Wake on the flute, return to Edinburgh Festival of the Sacred Arts at Canongate Kirk, âwith poetry and music, offering a reflection on home and homelessnessâ. Also at the Festival of the Sacred Arts will be Sacred Arts Festival Poetry at Church of the Sacred Heart, promising work ranging âwidely from masterpieces of the Middle Ages, through ballads and hymns of the Reformation, to satirical and meditative poetry from the 20th and 21st centuriesâ.
Ben Kassoy brings poems from his âspectacularly original book to life in a solo showâ at Zoo. The Funny Thing About a Panic Attack uses âphysical theatre, dance and traditional poetry reading to reveal the connections between mental health, art and pancakesâ.
Storyteller and classicist Jo Kelen brings a ânew, poetic reimagining of the myth of Achillesâ with Achilles, Death of the Gods at Paradise Green. âThe warrior Achilles finds himself in Troy, fighting a war that is not his. When Achillesâ lover Patroclus is killed in battle, Achilles inflicts unspeakable horrors upon those around him.â Iain Dale returns to the Fringe with his All Talk series of political interviews at the Pleasance including Humza Yousaf, Alex Salmond, Liz Truss, Anas Sarwar and Ruth Davidson.
Among the familiar faces returning to Edinburgh are David Harmer and Ray Globe, âthe irrepressible Glummer Twinsâ, back with The Beat Goes On at theSpaceUK, offering âstand-up comedy, spoken word and music from the beat generation through eight decades.â Performance poet and musician Attila the Stockbroker performs 14 Days, 14 Completely Different Shows at PBHâs Free Fringe, alongside his Early Music Show at St Ceceiliaâs Hall.
âHumour and horror are woven together with empathy in a shocking insight into the untold stories of ordinary women caught up in a whirlwind of politics, religion and magicâ in Witch? Women on Trial at Greenside. Tales of Haunted Edinburgh â Echoes From Beyond the Grave at Arthur Conan Doyle Centre invites audiences to hear âtales of the undead from a paranormal investigator as you discover a host of terrifying stories of hauntings from the cityâs dark pastâ. Anne Bayne of Dunsapie Loch is available online, a âpoignant audio play [and] a journey into the heart of Edinburgh’s literary history of 1740â.
Theatre
Deaf Action present *Smoke Not Included, a scripted stoner stage play. ‘I cannae tell if Iâm having fun or Iâm scared heâs gonnae murder us aw’. At Edinburgh Palette, a Pan-Africanist painter, Eda, is âcajoled by his friend and former agent Reki to go steal some of Da Vinci’s works that are presumably on tour in an art museum in Nigeriaâ in Who Tiff Monalisa? Jeremy McClain stars in Rat Tails (WIP) at Fruitmarket, a new one-man show directed by Matt McBrier. âAs he muses on his childhood and everything that got him to this moment, follow the Prozac-popping, biracial millennial whoâs married into a wealthy, British aristocratic familyâ.
The Good Iranian makes its Edinburgh Fringe debut with âa mesmerising and moving production directed by Sepy Baghaei. Enjoy the art of storytelling and the triumph of good over evil, all in one educational hourâ at Just the Tonic. âThough dementia is increasingly common in an ageing population, it remains an unknown quantity to manyâ. In William Kite has Memory Issues, follow Williamâs experience of seeking support for someone with early-onset Alzheimer’s as he faces his changing reality (Paradise Green). When their daughter announces that she wants to transition, a couple âfind themselves divided in their attitudes and judgementsâ. In Divided, the mother â who has always seen herself as inclusive â struggles with losing a daughter and gaining a son (The Royal Scots Club).
A historical satire championing John Kay, one of Edinburgh’s unsung artists, Passing Likeness at Virgin Hotels Roof Terrace is âa play of grotesque caricatures and still more grotesque originalsâ.
Enjoy a sip of mezcal at Comala, Comala, a âDay of the Dead-style theatrical experienceâ at Zoo. Adapted from a novel by Johnny Tait, Naked Truth is âan extreme satire on false-celebrity culture. Not for the easily offended. A deep, dark rollercoaster rideâ at Saint Stephenâs Theatre. In Why Am I (Still) Like This? at theSpaceUK and online, Nicole Nadler asks why she still canât âleave the house on time, pay her credit card on time or know where she put her glassesâ following her ADHD diagnosis. At Laughing Horse, The Guerilla Autistics show returns for its tenth year and asks âare you eccentric?â The Basement Entertainer at PBH’s Free Fringe is âa comedy about being a performer at heartâ, as basement-dwelling artist Kate performs her sketches âto an audience of miscellaneous junk with faces drawn onâ⊠until one of them starts talking back. Ne’er the Twain at Mayfield Salisbury Church is a âlaugh-a-minute comedyâ that tackles the historic joining of Edinburgh with the port of Leith, and a family caught on the boundary line.
âTwo rising Ghanaian creatives navigate their perception of identity, success, assimilation and homeâ in DRUM at Underbelly. A US writer âwith a big nose grows up hearing stories of mixed ethnic heritage to discover the stories are not true, sort of true, then true in a way that no one expectsâ in Journey to Long Nose at Greenside. The Shroud Maker at Pleasance weaves âa harrowing story of courage, love, escape and disappointment with comic fantasy and true stories to create a vivid portrait of life in Palestine before the recent heartbreaking eventsâ. In Do This One Thing for Me at Bedlam Theatre, Jane Elias tackles questions of Holocaust remembrance and how we move forward through an âacute portrait of her relationship with her father, a Greek Holocaust survivorâ.
Fix Your Mind at Gilded Balloon is a âa contemporary exploration of patriarchy, love and the internetâ, as two siblings are drawn in different directions by their chosen communities, while I Sell Windows at Assembly is âone Black woman’s exploration of what is birthed at the collision of grief, ambition and sexâ.
Stepping Out at Inverleith St Serf’s Church Centre âcharts the lives of seven women and one man attempting to tap their troubles away at a weekly dancing classâ, and at Hill Street Theatre, Rave is a jukebox musical set in a nightclub, where âwe see the lives and battles of a group of friends coming to terms with getting older and the reality of faded dreamsâ. A musical comedy about coming of age in the 1980s, âmashing hundreds of classic 80s songs into both dialogue and song (a la Moulin Rouge). Don’t Stop Believing: A Theatric Remix of the 1980s is at PBHâs Free Fringe.